NLNNext Left Notes2014-12-22T00:08:42Zhttp://antiauthoritarian.net/NLN/?feed=atomWordPressTAGhttp://antiauthoritarian.net/NLNhttp://antiauthoritarian.net/NLN/?p=11232014-12-22T00:08:42Z2014-12-22T00:08:42Zby Thomas Altfather Good

(Photo: Thomas Altfather Good)

NEW YORK (Dec. 21, 2014) – In the wake of the deaths of NYPD Officers Wenjian Liu and Rafael Ramos, Make the Road New York lead organizer Jose Lopez gave the following statement on behalf of the organization’s 16,000 Latino and black members:

“Today we express our condolences to the families of NYPD Officers Wenjian Liu and Rafael Ramos, who were killed yesterday in Brooklyn. Our thoughts and prayers are also with the family of the young woman who was shot in Baltimore by the same man. We know the grief of loss all too well. We often find ourselves mourning the loss of family members, neighbors, and loved ones to violence — whether at the hands of the police or violence within our communities. This grief grounds us in the ongoing work to ensure safety, dignity, and respect for all in our communities.

“All attempts made to link the tragic death of these two officers to the local or national movement — which has called for a justice system that works for all — is dangerous and misguided. This is a time when we must all stand together against senseless violence.”

Thomas Altfather Good is a member of the National Writers Union, UAW Local 1981

NEW YORK — December 13, 2014. Several thousand New Yorkers took to the streets on Saturday to express outrage at police for their role as trigger-men in the numerous deaths of unarmed African American men and boys — and at the judicial system for its history of exonerating police involved in these killings.

On a cold, windy, Winter day, protesters – a multi-generational, multicultural mix – marched from Washington Square to One Police Plaza. Their beef? The list of young Black men — one only 12-years-old, not yet a man — killed by police is lengthy and growing with alarming regularity. As if that wasn’t enough to bring protesters into the streets prosecutors seem unable to convince grand juries that sufficient probable cause exists for an indictment, often despite damning evidence. District attorneys appear inept, unable to obtain a mere indictment — not a conviction, an indictment. From Ferguson, Missouri, to Staten Island, New York, district attorneys seem incompetent. In Staten Island, Dan Donovan failed to secure an indictment for the Eric Garner homicide — in a town where it is often said that any DA could indict a ham sandwich. The possibility of complicity has been raised, further fueling discord. And on Saturday 30,000 protesters descended on Manhattan to express their discontent with the defenders of civilization. The solidarity and civility of the marchers, as good an example of diversity as you would find anywhere, made many observers, including this reporter, proud to be a New Yorker.

A multigenerational set of Sisters(Photo: Thomas Altfather Good)

The ever-expanding List(Photo: Thomas Altfather Good)

A march marshal(Photo: Thomas Altfather Good)

A legal system — and a chokehold?(Photo: Thomas Altfather Good)

For some activists it’s been a long struggle(Photo: Thomas Altfather Good)

The UAW contingent(Photo: Thomas Altfather Good)

Legal observers from the National Lawyers Guild(Photo: Thomas Altfather Good)

“Proud to be out in the streets today with my UAW sisters and brothers and New Yorkers of conscience as we marched for justice for Eric Garner and all those who have suffered at the hands of police misconduct and prosecutorial indifference.” – Scott Sommer, UAW Region 9A Subregional Director

(Photo: Thomas Altfather Good)

A UAW activist from Local 2325(Photo: Thomas Altfather Good)

“I am Eric Garner”`(Photo: Thomas Altfather Good)

“Stop Police Brutality…”(Photo: Thomas Altfather Good)

A circle of hope(Photo: Thomas Altfather Good)

No more Mr. Nice Guy…(Photo: Thomas Altfather Good)

“Hands Up, Don’t Shoot”(Photo: Thomas Altfather Good)

“The failure of the District Attorney in Staten Island to obtain an indictment in the killing of Eric Garner at the hands of the NYPD is not only shocking to the conscience, but an absurd and outrageous resultin light of publicly available evidence.

Recent incidents of abusive police actions in Ferguson, Staten Island, and Brooklyn, cannot go without those responsible being held accountable. In those places where the local authorities fail to act, it is incumbent that the Department of Justice step up and seek justice not just for the victims, but to attack poisonous policing practices.

Julie Kushner, Director, UAW Region 9A

Thomas Altfather Good is a proud member of the National Writers Union, UAW Local 1981

NEW YORK — December 7, 2014. More than 100 protesters of all faiths held a candlelit vigil in Union Square on the eve of the latest round on international talks in Lima, Peru on climate change organized by the United Nations — ovr 1,000 vigils were planned around the world under the rubric #lightforlima in Washington DC, London, Canada, India, UK, Germany, Nigeria, Israel, the Philippines, Brazil, Australia, Japan and Bangladesh and other countries.

Climate justice is a moral issue(Photo: Roy Murphy / NLN)

In New York about a dozen religious leaders said a few words and a prayer for the success of the latest round of climate change talks. They also honored the memory of those who have lost their lives pursuing climate justice, including 57 environmental activists murdered in Peru since 2002.

Organizer Catherine Skopic cited in particular the dangers offered by the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP), an international so-called “trade” agreement which will prevent local people from defending their environment against global corporations. The agreement is being negotiated in secret by government agencies and corporate representatives.

In a related story – on December 10, International Human Rights Day, about 50 protesters of all ages gathered beside the United Nations in New York to demand that world governments take decisive action to combat climate change. The meeting, organized by 350NYC.org and co-sponsored by more than 30 other groups, came together despite the light snow and cold weather.

Amongst the speakers were two youngsters, Xiuhtezcatl Roske-Martinez, 14, and his brother Itzcuauhtli, 11 years old. They are indigenous environmental activists from Boulder, Colorado, who were brought up in the Aztec tradition. They have spent most of their young lives dedicated to protecting the environment. “I gave my first speech at a climate change rally when I was six years old,” said Xiuhtezcatl.

On October 27, 45 days ago, Itzcuauhtli decided to make himself heard by not speaking. His brother said hundreds of children from around the world are sending photos wearing green wrist bands of support.

Roy Murphy is a regular contributor to NLN and a member of the National Writers Union, UAW Local 1981
]]>0TAGhttp://antiauthoritarian.net/NLNhttp://antiauthoritarian.net/NLN/?p=11192014-12-09T18:28:17Z2014-12-09T18:28:17Zby Thomas Altfather Good

Calling for justice for Eric Garner – and his family(Photo: Thomas Altfather Good / NLN)

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — December 7, 2014. On Pearl Harbor Day a group of Staten Island clergy and parishioners used prayer to demand justice for a day that will live in infamy: the day Eric Garner died while being arrested by NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo, who to date has eluded prosecution despite massive nationwide protests.

Demanding a better world – for the children(Photo: Thomas Altfather Good / NLN)

One of the Island’s pastors leads a group prayer(Photo: Thomas Altfather Good / NLN)

Praying for justice(Photo: Thomas Altfather Good / NLN)

The rally site: two doors down from the place where Eric Garner died(Photo: Thomas Altfather Good / NLN)

Thomas Altfather Good is a proud member of the National Writers Union, UAW Local 1981
]]>0TAGhttp://antiauthoritarian.net/NLNhttp://antiauthoritarian.net/NLN/?p=11182014-12-09T18:35:08Z2014-12-09T18:24:21Zby Thomas Altfather Good

Illustrator Nick Thorkelson has created a cartoon that depicts the ideas of one of NLN’s favourite thinkers: Herbert Marcuse. The panels shown here are the start of a project Thorkelson is working on in collaboration with our old friend Paul Buhle. Stay tuned and we’ll let you know when the book is available — in the interim have a look at a great cartoon that has as its subject matter the so-called “Guru of the New Left.”

All art work is copyright by Nick Thorkelson and used with permission. Special thanks to our old friend Paul Buhle.

NEW YORK — December 5, 2014. This week saw a series of turbulent nationwide protests that escalated in volume as each protest drew on the emotions and demands of the others.

Wednesday, December 3, 2014 – A new organization, #UStired2, organized a national day of action in more than 43 cities across the United States on two days notice. It was seeking action on the 43 students from the Rural Teachers’ College in Ayotzinapa, who disappeared in Mexico on September 26, 2014.

The organization named itself when Mexico’s attorney general abruptly cut off a press conference on the missing students by saying, “Enough, I am tired.”

About 40 people in downtown Manhattan joined the nation-wide protests demanding a US Senate hearing on US military aid to Mexico. U.S. law obliges the U.S. government to cut off aid to security forces who violate human rights.

A speaker drew applause when he said that militarization of efforts to combat conflicts affects not just Mexico, but Colombia, Venezuela, Gaza, and Ferguson, Missouri.

(Photo: Roy Murphy / NLN)

He said, “The 43 are not dead yet. The Mexican government wants to call them dead and close the issue. Their only crime was to demand a better life.”

#UStired2 said, “The first step in the process is to stop “Plan México,” a multi-billion dollar U.S. aid package that has done nothing to reduce drug traffic into the U.S., and has instead supported a corrupt government using the drug war as cover for a war on its own people.”

It is reported that the local mayor of Iguala in Mexico thought the students would disrupt a speech by his wife, so he ordered the police to arrest them. The police handed the students over to a local drug cartel. They haven’t been seen since.

Investigations revealed several mass graves in the area, but so far no human remains have been identified.

(Photo: Roy Murphy / NLN)

Thursday, December 4, 2014, midday – A diverse group of 400 gathered outside City Hall in Manhattan to support the call of fast food workers across the country for a minimum wage of $15 an hour.

(Photo: Roy Murphy / NLN)

They were part of low-wage workers in more than 190 cities who walked off the job. Employees from discount and convenience stores, as well as workers from 10 of the nation’s busiest airports, joined in.

(Photo: Roy Murphy / NLN)

Protesting workers in New York were diverse in their age, gender and race — and concerned about issues extending beyond the workplace. They held a four minute and 30 second silence in remembrance of Michael Brown, who was left dead in a pool of blood, uncovered, on the public street in Ferguson for four and a half hours before police moved the body.

One speaker said, “If we don’t do it together, no one will have justice. And we demand justice!”

(Photo: Roy Murphy / NLN)

Thursday, December 4, 2014, evening – Thursday night, more than 7,000 gathered in Foley Square in downtown Manhattan, and there were smaller protests elsewhere in the city and other boroughs. They were protesting yet another grand jury failure to indict a police officer who killed an unarmed African American man.

Similar large protests were held in many other major cities across America.

The previous day a grand jury refused to indict the police officer responsible for the death of Eric Garner. Garner died after being placed in an apparent chokehold by police in Staten Island. The decision came a week after the grand jury in Ferguson, Missouri, made the same decision following the shooting of Michael Brown. In both cases the victims were African American — and the police officers were white.

(Photo: Roy Murphy / NLN)

The Foley Square crowd was made up of all sorts – all races, all ages, all walks of life. After the rally, many went to the Manhattan Bridge and the West Side Highway, temporarily shutting them down.

(Photo: Roy Murphy / NLN)

Police arrested over 200. The rallies in New York and elsewhere were larger and more numerous than the previous night when the Garner decision was announced.

One of the new strategies employed by protestors is a spontaneous redirection of their efforts. They arrived at the Hudson Tunnel and found it blocked by police, so they immediately went to the West Side Highway. Or they suddenly gathered in Times Square. Instead of going where the police department allows them so they can be hemmed in and “controlled,” they exercise their right of peaceful assembly wherever they can. Some observors say they change direction so rapidly that even social media cannot keep up.

Huffington Post posted all of Eric Garner’s last words, recorded by a bystander, as the full headline of its lead story on the protests:

“Get away for what? Every time you see me, you want to mess with me. I’m tired of it.

It stops today.

Why would you…? Everyone standing here will tell you I didn’t do nothing. I did not sell nothing. Because every time you see me, you want to harass me. You want to stop me selling cigarettes. I’m minding my business, officer, I’m minding my business. Please just leave me alone.

I told you the last time, please just leave me alone. please please, don’t touch me. Do not touch me.

I can’t breathe.

I can’t breathe.

I can’t breathe.

I can’t breathe.

I can’t breathe.

I can’t breathe.

I can’t breathe.

I can’t breathe.

I can’t breathe.

I can’t breathe.

I can’t breathe.”

Roy Murphy is a regular contributor to NLN and a member of the National Writers Union, UAW Local 1981
]]>0TAGhttp://antiauthoritarian.net/NLNhttp://antiauthoritarian.net/NLN/?p=11162014-12-04T21:08:00Z2014-12-04T21:08:00Z

by Thomas Altfather Good

Marchers taking to the street, heading for the 120 Precinct(Photo: Thomas Altfather Good)

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — December 3, 2014. Shortly after the no-indictment decision of the grand jury investigating NYPD officer Pantaleo’s role in the homicide of Eric Garner stunned Islanders took to the streets to protest.

On Wednesday a grand jury declined to indict New York City police officer Daniel Pantaleo on any charges relating to his role in the death of Eric Garner. The verdict stunned New Yorkers as the NYC medical examiner had ruled the death a homicide – a diagnosis underscored by a video that went viral shortly after the incident. The video appeared to show Pantaleo using a chokehold during a botched arrest of Garner – for selling loose cigarettes. In the video Pantaleo can be seen pressing Garner’s face against the sidewalk as Garner repeats, “I can’t breathe.”

A protester holding a (partial) list of the Fallen.(Photo: Thomas Altfather Good)

After the grand jury decision, residents of the Tompkinsville area assembled at the spot where Garner died, to express grief and frustration at the lack of an indictment. Suddenly an impromptu march to the 120 Precinct began. The marchers blocked Richmond Terrace as they advanced on the NYPD precinct. The march and subsequent rally were peaceful, despite the anguish of the participants.

A young woman holding vigil at the spot where Eric Garner died.(Photo: Thomas Altfather Good)

]]>0TAGhttp://antiauthoritarian.net/NLNhttp://antiauthoritarian.net/NLN/?p=11142014-11-23T20:03:22Z2014-11-23T20:03:22ZProtestors on the steps of Manhattan’s State Supreme Court(Photo: Roy Murphy / NLN)

NEW YORK — November 18, 2014. On Tuesday, 50 protesters gathered in front of the State Supreme Court buildings in Manhattan to hold a “KXL=Game Over NYC” press conference. The event, one of many held across the country, was organized by 350NYC.org. It was designed to put last-minute pressure on the Senate, which voted on whether to approve the pipeline that evening. The vote failed.

Zephyr Teachout, who gained a third of the votes when she challenged Andrew Cuomo for the governorship, told the protesters, “They want a 1,700-mile pipeline to transport the dirtiest oil on the planet. The pipeline may not go through New York City, but millions of gallons of salt water did go through our subway system.”

New York city is cited as one of the three major cities in the world most threatened by the rising waters caused by climate change.

Zephyr Teachout addressing the protesters(Photo: Roy Murphy / NLN)

Teachout said Charles Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand, the New York senators, should not just vote against the pipeline, but should speak out every day against fossil fuel use. She said that’s also true for New York governor Andrew Cuomo, former New York senator Hillary Clinton and President Barack Obama.

“It’s time to stop digging, to stop fracking. The nation that poisons its air chokes itself,” said Teachout.

Alexis Smallwood, an activist with Rockaway Wildfire, a community organization that sprang up after Hurricane Sandy, lived through the destructive effects of the hurricane. She ended her speech by bouncing up and down and chanting, “We’re all fired up, we can’t take it no more!”

Bethany and Rufus performing at the protest(Photo: Roy Murphy / NLN)

The Bethany and Rufus musical duo sang two spirited protest songs, helped by many of the protesters during the choruses.

According to 350NYC.org, the thousands of jobs the pipeline would create would last only one or two years. The CEO of TransCanada conceded that it will retain only 50 employees in the United States once the pipeline is finished.

The Keystone XL pipeline bill went down to a very narrow defeat: fifty-nine senators voted for the pipeline bill, one short of the 60 needed to clear a filibuster. Joining all of the Senate’s Republicans, 14 Democrats voted for the bill.

Legislation to force approval of the pipeline will likely make a comeback as soon as the new Congress is sworn in in January, when a bill will have more supporters in the Senate.

“Republicans are committed to getting Keystone approved,” said Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) on the Senate floor. If not today, McConnell said, “then a new majority after the beginning of the year will be taking this up and sending it down to the desk of the president.”

NLN contributor Roy Murphy is a member of the National Writers Union, UAW Local 1981
]]>0TAGhttp://antiauthoritarian.net/NLNhttp://antiauthoritarian.net/NLN/?p=11112014-11-02T15:30:24Z2014-11-02T15:30:24Z

BROOKLYN, NY – October 29, 2014. Three days after a protest march down Atlantic Avenue against the closure of the full-service hospital, New York State Attorney General, Eric Schneiderman, and Comptroller, Thomas Di Napoli, approved the State University of New York’s (SUNY’s) plan to sell Brooklyn’s Long Island College Hospital (LICH) to a real estate developer.

The 157-year-old hospital served a fast-growing swath of Brooklyn stretching from Red Hook to Williamsburg.

The protest march of about 60 people included City Council member Brad Lander and Congresswoman Nydia Velazquez. A month before New York’s Comptroller Scott Stringer had said, “Brooklyn’s exploding population needs more health care services, not less.” And in July last year Mayor Bill de Blasio, while he was a mayoral candidate, was arrested while protesting the closure of the LICH.

SUNY has repeatedly said it had to shut down LICH and sell the property because the hospital was losing millions of dollars a month. However, evidence has emerged that LICH treated thousands of patients for free for almost two years, losing at least $100 million in revenues. It could not bill the insurance companies for that money because it failed to register its doctors with the companies.

Protestors on Atlantic Avenue, Brooklyn(Photo: Roy Murphy / NLN)

It is not yet known whether SUNY has to repay $140 million it borrowed from the Othmer Endowment.

“What happened to the Othmer Endowment money?” Lander said to the protestors. “Was the bidding process legal and appropriate? At so many points it appeared rigged,” he said.

SUNY Board Chairman H. Carl McCall says the sale will include “health care services for the community” in the form of an ambulatory care center. “This includes the construction of a new state-of-the-art facility and a total private investment by NYU Langone Medical Center of $175 million,” McCall said.

The march came after nearly two years of community protests and legal action. A coalition of community organizations, health care providers and elected officials has maintained that northwest Brooklyn’s growing population needs a full-service hospital, not a “walk-in” emergency department.

Roy Murphy is a regular contributor to NLN and a member of the National Writers Union, UAW Local 1981
]]>0TAGhttp://antiauthoritarian.net/NLNhttp://antiauthoritarian.net/NLN/?p=11092014-10-21T18:34:17Z2014-10-19T23:34:38ZEZ Pass Call Center worker, and CWA shop steward, Daniel Quinones wants a living wage(Photo: Thomas Altfather Good / NLN)

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — October 18, 2014. On Saturday, the newest members of the Communications Workers of America (CWA) Local 1102 – the EZ Pass Call Center workers – rallied on Staten Island in support of their union’s upcoming contract talks with Xerox.

The newest members of CWA Local 1102 work at the EZ Pass call center for New York State, located on Staten Island. The call center provides customer support for EZ Pass subscribers.

Six years ago the workers voted for union representation, which improved their working conditions, but the situation at the call center rapidly deteriorated after Xerox implemented a piecework scheme called “achievement based compensation.” Customer Service Representatives are paid approximately 87 cents per call. This, combined with frequent computer breakdowns – resulting in slowdowns, means workers struggle to earn $15 an hour.

The union enjoys significant political support. Politicians at the rally included New York State Senator Diane Savino, the Assemblyman representing Staten Island, Michael Cusick, representatives from New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer’s office, and representatives from the Working Families Party.

Commenting on a recent decertification election, which failed to unseat the union, State Senator Diane Savino told the workers, “It’s never about your hourly pay, but the stripping of your rights. They want you to say, this union’s doing nothing for me. Never allow them to convince you that you can do better on your own.”

“Achievement based compensation benefits the company but not the workers,” said shop steward Daniel Quinones. “If you have one bad call 30 percent of your pay is docked…We need an hourly pay rate.”

View Photos From The Rally

Roy Murphy and Thomas Altfather Good are members of the National Writers Union, UAW Local 1981
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